but
"🙂".reverse() == "🙃"
Then “b” backwards would have to be “d”
"E".reverse() == "∃"
Best I can do is
"\ude41🙂".split("").reverse().join("")
returns
"\ude42🙁"
"🐈".concat() = "😼"
The npm package
flip-text
is the closest that I know of:const flip = require('flip-text'); const str = "dobo"; const flippedStr = flip(str); console.log(flippedStr); // Output: "qoqo"
However, with great libraries like is-thirteen I’m sure JavaScript will some day gain a proper flipping library.
[🌽].pop() == 🍿
🚴.push() = 🚲🤸
Today I found out that this is valid JS:
const someString = "test string"; console.log(someString.toString());
I dint know many OO languages that don’t have a useless
toString
on string types. It mostly seems to be a result of using a generic string-able type that’s implemented to add toString() in a standardised way.Calling
toString
on a string is practically a no-op anyway.I dint know many OO languages that don’t have a useless toString on string types
Okay, fair enough. Guess I never found about it because I never had to do it… JS also allows for
"test string".toString()
directly, not sure how it goes in other languages.It’s also incredibly useful as a failsafe in a helper method where you need the argument to be a string but someone might pass in something that is sort of a string. Lets you be a little more flexible in how your method gets called
Java would be
"test string".toString()
. C# has"test string".ToString()
. Python hasstr("test string")
(asstr()
is Python’stoString
equivalent). Rust hasString::from("test string").to_string()
.That’s just from the top of my head. I’m sure there’s more.
Edit: actually, I think Rust’s
to_string()
may not be entirely useless, I think it may be used as a consuming placeholder forclone()
? Not sure how that would be useful, but it’s not a complete no-op at least.
I dint know many OO languages that don’t have a useless toString on string types.
Well, that’s just going to be one of those “it is what it is” things in an OO language if your base class has a
toString()
-equivalent. Sure, it’s probably useless for a string, but if everything’s an object and inherits from some top-levelObject
class with atoString()
method, then you’re going to get atoString()
method in strings too. You’re going to get atoString()
in everything; in JS even functions have atoString()
(the output of which depends on the implementation):In a dynamically typed language, if you know that everything can be turned into a string with
toString()
(or the like), then you can just call that method on any value you have and not have to worry about whether it’ll hurl at runtime because eg.String
s don’t have atoString
because it’d technically be useless.Same is true for JavaScript’s namesake, Java;
Object
has atoString
method, so everything but primitives (int
,long
, etc.) must have atoString
method (and primitives sort of have one too in a roundabout way).I think JavaScript’s
toString
also serves another function, namely to have some form of fallback when doing operations on what should be incompatible types.[] + ""
, for instance; JavaScript will calltoString()
to do type conversion when the nearest matching type is aString
.
Everything that’s an
Object
is going to either inheritObject.prototype.toString()
(mdn) or provide its own implementation.A
String
is anObject
, so it’s going to have atoString()
method. It doesn’t inheritObject
’s implementation, but provides one that’s sort of a no-op / identity function but not quite.So, the thing is that when you say
const someString = "test string"
, you’re not actually creating a newString
object instance and assigning it tosomeString
, you’re creating astring
(lowercases
!) primitive and assigning it tosomeString
:Compare this with creating a
new String("bla")
:In Javascript, primitives don’t actually have any properties or methods, so when you call
someString.toString()
(or call any other method or access any property onsomeString
), what happens is thatsomeString
is coerced into aString
instance, and thentoString()
is called on that. Essentially it’s like goingnew String(someString).toString()
.Now, what
String.prototype.toString()
(mdn) does is it returns the underlyingstring
primitive and not theString
instance itself.Why? Fuckin beats me, I honestly can’t remember what the point of this is because I haven’t been elbow-deep in Javascript in years, but regardless this is the logic behind
String
’stoString()
.
You could implement that on a chat, but I wouldn’t do that on a string
Where’s your sense of adventure?!
“:-)”.reverse() == “)-:”
Close enough
Also, it should turn an error into an empty but successful call. /s
Calling
reverse()
on a function should return its inverseisprime.reverse(True) // outputs 19 billion prime numbers. Checkmate, atheists.
It’s a just a joke, but I feel like that actually says something pretty profound about duck typing, and how computable it actually is.
"☹️".reverse() == "☹️"
wasn’t it
🙁
.
r
e
v
e
r
s
e
()You’re no fun
Look closer at the beauty mark, I flipped the emoji
Be the operator overload you wish to see in the world
JavaScript taking notes